Examples:

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Comics

An issue of Catwoman has Selina get hit in the face with one of the Joker's pies. The pie itself is harmless... but it does carry a radioactive tracer that draws two ballistic missiles right to it. Which means Catwoman has to race the missiles over the roofs of Gotham in hopes that the missiles don't catch up with her while she's in a residential area.

In X2: X-Men United, Mystique puts a syringe filled with iron in solution into an off-duty guard's butt. How bad this would be for him in the long term is unknown considering that he seems only a little bit under the weather the next day, but he's also hung over and recovering from some kind of drug. But long-term effects don't really matter because Magneto uses the extra iron in the guard's blood to escape, killing the guard.

The Big Bad's MO in The Deadly Bees. The titular bees are attracted to a certain substance, which causes the bees to attack the substance relentlessly. This is emphasized when the jacket of the local inspector gets the substance on it; when the jacket is removed, the bees keep attacking it instead of the inspector.

Literature

In Jhereg, Keira uses her pickpocketing skills to replace Mellar's regular daggers with Morganti daggers (which destroy the victim's soul). Aliera then picked a fight with him and got stabbed, causing Mellar to panic and flee Morrolan's castle, allowing Vlad to kill him. Mellar didn't know that Aliera's soul was protected by her sword, allowing her to be resurrected.

In Children of Dune, the Atreides twins are sent elaborate robes by the rival Imperial House. The catch is two Laza tigers have been trained to attack and kill anyone wearing said robes.

Happens by accident in The Hound of the Baskervilles, in which the escaped convict Seldon is secretly given some old clothes of Sir Henry's by a well-wisher. The Hound is set on the trail by the smell of Sir Henry's boot, and understandably mistakes Seldon for its real target because of the clothes' odor.

In one Honor Harrington book, the Manticoran Queen and Prime Minster are given Grayson "memory stones" that contain transponders which will attract the two missiles that will be released as soon as the two of them are in space.

In "The Keys of Marinus", Vasor, in order to ensure that Ian does not come back from rescuing Altos, slips him some raw meat to attract the wolves. Under the name "Vasor Gambit", this was the former Trope Namer.

In "The Web of Fear", the Great Intelligence's Mole slips model yeti into the pockets of several heroes in order to attract the dangerous yeti-robots to them.

In the 1970s The Bionic Woman episode "Deadly Music", an enemy agent attaches a homing signal to Jamie Sommers so trained sharks will attack her. And yes, this was probably the inspiration for the Never Say Never Again example above.

Star Trek: The Next Generation: A variation occurs on the episode where Picard is forced to take a vacation on the Pleasure Planet Risa. Riker raves about Risa at various points in the series and asks Picard to pick him up something called a "horga'hn" while there. Turns out the horga'hn is a fertility statue and displaying one in public (as Picard does, unaware of its meaning) is essentially broadcasting that one is looking for some action, specifically a sexual rite known as jamaharon. When Picard finally got someone to explain why random women kept brazenly approaching/propositioning him as he tried to find a moment's quiet, he was not amused.

One Law & Order episode involved a girl giving her boyfriend a leather jacket that had markings from a particular gang on it, then asking him to meet her in the territory of a rival gang.

Jane will sometimes pull this, such as planting a seemingly innocuous marble in a man's pocket and then claiming marbles are used to identify Red John's followers.

To stop a serial killer who had managed to cover his tracks a little too well, Jane appeared on a live broadcast show with him. He brought up Red John in their conversation after jabbing at the killer's ego, prompting the killer to mock the supposedly-deceased Red John as a pathetic amateur. Not a day later, he was found dead with Red John's signature.

A mob boss uses a variant of this in an episode of Mission: Impossible to get revenge on his girlfriend for turning him in: he cuts her brake line, lets all the fluid drain out, and sends her to "pick up five grand".

In Metal Gear, shortly before fighting the first boss, Snake is captured and his inventory stolen. When he retrieves his items, a savvy player will note that a transmitter has been placed in among his gear. As long as he carries it, guards are alerted to his presence.

In Metal Gear Solid 3: Snake Eater, a transmitter is placed on Snake after his capture. If you don't remove it, you have to evade the Ocelot unit once you get back to the jungle, but you also get a bonus cutscene a little bit later.

In Left 4 Dead, the Boomer has low HP and deals poor damage on its own, but it can vomit on survivors, attracting common infected to them.

In BlazBlue, Arakune's projectile attacks work by having him "curse" the target, causing them to be attacked by insects (when he commands it) until they manage to land another blow on him.

Inverted in Dragon Quest III with the Golden Claw. Dangerous in the pyramid (every step's a random encounter, and you can't use magic in the basement where you get it), but once you leave, as long as you don't return to the pyramid, it's the fighter's best weapon (it still increases the encounter rate outside the pyramid, just not nearly as drastically).

In one of the most horrifically inhumane tactics in the campaign, Mengsk has Kerrigan plant Psi-Emitters on a rebellious planet's surface. This attracts the Zerg swarm to ravage the area. Actually a double example, as the Zerg then attract the Protoss fleet to simply incinerate the entire planet.

In one User Friendly strip, Kuan is driving Sid crazy with the Badger Song, so Sid gives him a Lovecraft-themed version with "Hastur" for "Badger". Sic transitKuan.

Web Original

This is used to kill a man in Whateley Universe. A man who is known to be rather friendly with the local weres is slipped a fungus that affects them like catnip does cats by a man who wants all the land he owns.

Western Animation

South Park: Timmy tries to off Jimmy by giving him a parka identical to Kenny's. Jimmy then walks down the street with half a dozen fatal accidents just missing him.

It was alleged in interviews after the fact that some commanders put troublesome soldiers in the position of field communications men in World War II, because the huge aerials and bulky radio backpacks guaranteed that they would be easy targets for snipers. How much truth there actually is in this is debatable.

Community

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